Seven mumps cases reported at ICE detention facility in Houston

The adults were all detained during their infectious period and there is no evidence the disease was transmitted to anyone outside ICE's medium-security facility, called CoreCivic, the agency said in a news release Saturday.

"Since these individuals were isolated inside the facility during the period they were infectious, we do not anticipate these cases posing a threat to the community," said Dr. David Persse, Houston's local health authority and EMS medical director, said in the release.

One person went to the hospital for treatment and the others received care at the facility, KPRC-TV reported.

The department said it will conduct an on-site visit in a few days and is working with the facility on infection control methods.

Mumps is a highly contagious disease. It typically starts with a few days of fever, headache, muscle aches, tiredness, and loss of appetite and then swollen salivary glands. Most recover from mumps without serious complications.

Two doses of the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine are 97 percent effective for life and one dose is 93 percent effective, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. And additional vaccines aren't needed over the years.

"We've been dealing with mumps for hundreds of years. It's a common viral illness," Persse said. "The number of seven is small, but for this community, that's an uptick and that's one of the reasons it has our attention."

The measles vaccination program started in 1963. Before then, an estimated 3 million to 4 million people got measles each year in the United States, according to the CDC. Last year there were around 2,300 mumps cases.

Mumps cases are usually prevalent in crowded environments, including living in a dormitory with a person who has mumps or playing on the same sports team.

In 2016-17, a large outbreak in a close-knit community in northwest Arkansas, resulted in nearly 3,000 cases.